Asked by julius
How does the tilt of Earth’s axis and its movement around the sun play a part in the changing of the seasons in the Northern Hemisphere? my hypothesis is where the sun is the sun is the most its summer i nedd better explanation
Answers
Answered by
Damon
When the north pole is tilted toward the sun, around 23 degrees at Summer Solstice, the sun is higher in the sky in the north and in fact you can see it for 24 hours if you are above the arctic circle.
When the earth does a half revolution around the sun, that same north pole now points about 23 degrees away from the sun, and it is hot down below the equator.
When the earth does a half revolution around the sun, that same north pole now points about 23 degrees away from the sun, and it is hot down below the equator.
Answered by
Rachael - Connexus
Thanks Damon, you're a life saver!
Answered by
anonn
nicee
Answered by
Anonymous
how do i put this in my own words
Answered by
shotii>-<
Change some words or remove a sentence
Answered by
natalie
thanks
Answered by
Nova
tysm!
Answered by
Mrs.Sue
um
ummmmm
ummmmmmmmm
ummmmmmmmmmmmm
ummmmmm
ummmmmmm
ummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
ummmmm
ummmmmmmmm
ummmmmmmmmmmmm
ummmmmm
ummmmmmm
ummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Answered by
Kitten
Just read the response a few times, go to the question and try to rewrite it from memory. That should help.
Answered by
lola bunny (my secret is im a pig )
thx guys
Answered by
MVP🥴✌🏼✨✨
Thxs
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.